Chester Cathedral is one of 70 venues in the country chosen to display a special candle to commemorate the anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camps in 1945.

The candle will be installed on Tuesday, January 27 as part of the national 70 candles for 70 years project, and displayed as part of a schools conference to mark Holocaust Memorial Day 2015.

Special guest Frederick Naftel, whose great grandmother survived the Holocaust, will light the candle and give a talk about his experiences.

The candles are designed by internationally renowned sculptor Sir Anish Kapoor, best known for the ArcelorMittal Orbit, an observation tower in London’s Olympic Park and Chicago’s mirrored, legume-shaped Cloud Gate, which is more commonly known as the Bean.

The candles will symbolically link the 70 events taking place in each corner of the UK, ensuring that Holocaust Memorial Day has as far a reach as possible and that each of the specially chosen 70 activities are connected to the main UK commemorative event in central London where six of the candles will also be lit.

Education officer at Chester Cathedral Helen Barber, said: “We are delighted to have been chosen to take part in the national 70 candles for 70 years project. Being part of the project and having the candle in the building will help to focus our minds for our annual commemoration of Holocaust Memorial Day. We hope that it will encourage local people to engage with the topic of the Holocaust and allow them to think and reflect. It is vital that we remember and reflect upon the horrors of the past, and honour those who survived.”

The candle will remain on display in the cathedral for the rest of the year.

To find out where the rest of the candles are in the UK visit the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust wesbite.